Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Wednesday Weigh-In: Pressing On

(I stopped blogging on Wednesdays about my weight partly because of time demands with my schooling but so many of you let me know how much you missed it that I've decided to start up again.)

So here it is 10 months after I started at the beginning of the year saying I wanted to lose 100 pounds and well let’s just say it’s been an up and down battle.



To date, my total overall loss for the year is 7 pounds.


Seven.


That’s it.


At one point I’d lost close to 20.


But despite the lack of overall weight reduction, a lot of my personal habits have improved:


• I’m walking more consistently.


• I’m no longer bingeing


• At least half the time I’m not eating anything after dinner.


• I’m asking God more consistently for help.


• I’m journaling more about the inner issues that may be triggering my over-indulgence.


So there is progress.


Not perfection, but progress.


I’ve been quoting Philippians 3:14 over and over again lately as I contemplate the idea of progress, not perfection:


“I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.”


I press toward, I’m working at it, I’m making a continual effort.


I like the way The Message puts it:


“I'm not saying that I have this all together, that I have it made. But I am well on my way, reaching out for Christ, who has so wondrously reached out for me. Friends, don't get me wrong: By no means do I count myself an expert in all of this, but I've got my eye on the goal, where God is beckoning us onward—to Jesus. I'm off and running, and I'm not turning back.”


So for today, that is enough. I don’t have it all together and I’ve stumbled much but I am well on my way.


And what about you? What are you pressing towards today? What achievements have you fallen short of that you’d like to keep trying to reach?


We can’t do it alone, but together, hand-in-hand with Jesus Christ we can make it.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Praying Outside the Paper Bag

Have you ever felt like you can't pray your way out of a paper bag?

Would you like to know how to pop the bag and have deep, meaningful prayer every time?

Then keep reading.

It's true that sometimes prayer can be difficult. Even E.M. Bounds, that great man of prayer had this to say on the subject of prayer:

"Prayer is the easiest and hardest of all things; the simplest and the sublimest;
the weakest and the most powerful; its results lie outside the range of human possibilities - they are limited only by the omnipotence of God."
And while it's true that prayer indeed can be all of these things:


Easy and hard.

Simple and sublime.

Weak and powerful.

There is a secret in breaking through to sweet communion with God each and every time we bow our knee.
The secret is in surrender.

The more we surrender, the more of Christ and His truths fill our mind.

Our hearts become  fixed on Biblical truths.

Our will becomes Christ's will.

Joy flows.

Peace fills our being.

Anxiety dissipates.

And because at those moments our spirit is in sync with the Holy Spirit of God prayer is easy.

So the challenge, the struggle, the hardness that E.M. Bounds speaks of is not in getting to God - He is always with us. It is in the breaking of our self-will, our agenda's, our pride.
If we are angry and really don't want to forgive, or if we are more worried about all the things we have to do as soon as our prayer time is over, then prayer is a chore.

An obligation.

A drudgery.

A duty to be fulfilled.

The more our minds are focused on our needs, our wants,  and our discomfort the less awareness of God's spirit we feel.

Perhaps that is why we are instructed in scripture to "... lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us." (Hebrews 1:21)
Because we must first let go of everything that is not like Christ before we can truly come into close, intimate fellowship with Him.
So if you, like me, feel like  you're trying to pray yourself out of a paper bag look inward. Search your heart and see if there are any attitudes or grudges that you're holding onto. And if you discover that there is, let them all go, ask Jesus to purify you, to help you to overcome.

Then look around you and discover that while you were asking for Christ's help, He removed the paper bag.

Lord Jesus, we want to live every day in a way that glorifies You. Forgive us of our selfish ways. Help us to let go of hurts and resentments. We want a deep fellowship and closeness with You and we know that is only possible if first we lay aside the sins that beset us. In Jesus Name. Amen


 

Monday, October 11, 2010

A Fool For Christ's Sake

Check out this video.



These people are making fools of themselves for a chance to win $10,000. What would you be willing to do for $10,000?

But more importantly, what would you be willing to do for the cause of Christ?

Would you be willing to dance like a chicken in public if Jesus asked you to?

It's doubtful that the Lord Jesus would ask you to dance like a chicken, but He might want you to do something equally humiliating. The book of Jeremiah is rife with the uncommon things God asked the prophet Jeremiah to do: walk naked through the streets, eat a scroll of paper, wear an oxen's yoke on his neck.

The Apostle Paul told the Corinthian church that he was made a fool for Christ's sake:



"We are [looked upon as] fools on account of Christ and for His sake, but you are [supposedly] so amazingly wise and prudent in Christ! We are weak, but you are [so very] strong! You are highly esteemed, but we are in disrepute and contempt!" (1 Corinthians 4:10 from the Amplified Bible)

And King David, danced in a public place, similar to  what the people in the video did, but it wasn't for money, it was for the worship and glory of the Lord Jesus Christ:

"David, ceremonially dressed in priest's linen, danced with great abandon before God. The whole country was with him as he accompanied the Chest of God with shouts and trumpet blasts. But as the Chest of God came into the City of David, Michal, Saul's daughter, happened to be looking out a window. When she saw King David leaping and dancing before God, her heart filled with scorn." (2 Samuel 6:13-15 from The Message)

And as you just read, Michal, who was Saul's daughter and David's wife was not happy about it at all. The Bible says that 'David returned home to bless his family' but Michal says;

 "How wonderfully the king has distinguished himself today—exposing himself to the eyes of the servants' maids like some burlesque street dancer!"

Oooh, how I love David's reply to her:

"In God's presence I'll dance all I want! He chose me over your father and the rest of our family and made me prince over God's people, over Israel. Oh yes, I'll dance to God's glory—more recklessly even than this. And as far as I'm concerned...I'll gladly look like a fool...but among these maids you're so worried about, I'll be honored no end."


And then check out the consequences of scorning those who are willing to be a fool for  Christ's sake: "Michal, Saul's daughter, was barren the rest of her life." (2 Samuel 6:23)

So today, on this October Monday I ask you, what are you willing to do for the cause the Christ?

Monday, October 4, 2010

GUEST POST: Gianna Jensen



This is such a powerful video, I had to share it with all of you. It's not just that Gianna survived being aborted at 7 months, it's her bold declaration of Jesus being the Christ and the way she tells her enemies, "I am God's girl. I refuse to bear the anger and hatred that you hurl at me because Jesus Christ died on the cross to bear it all."

May we all learn to live everyday with Jesus the way Gianna has.

Oh God, grant us the courage to stand strong for what is right and give us a voice to influence our world.

If you had an audience today, my dear reader, what would you tell them?


Until next time,


Debbie